The present disclosure relates to a recording apparatus that records an image as well as the associated tank for the recording apparatus.
Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2018-161887 discusses a configuration in which an ink tank can be replenished with ink while gas and liquid are being exchanged between an ink replenishing container and the ink tank. According to the configuration, a plurality of flow channels inserted inside the ink tank via an opening of the ink tank becomes an ink flow channel and an air flow channel. This enables a user to replenish the ink tank with ink without compression of the ink replenishing container.
However, when ink is injected into the ink tank from the ink replenishing container, the configuration discussed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2018-161887 may consume time to determine a flow channel through which ink is to flow and a flow channel through which air is to flow, out of the plurality of flow channels. Such a situation lowers a speed of ink injecting and prolongs time necessary for the ink injecting.
The present disclosure is directed to a recording apparatus with a shortened time for injecting of a recording material into a tank.
A recording apparatus includes a tank including a chamber configured to store liquid to be supplied to a recording head that ejects the liquid and a filling port from which the liquid is injected into the chamber, and an injection auxiliary member configured to assist injecting of the liquid into the chamber from the filling port, the injection auxiliary member including a first flow channel defined by a first upper end portion that opens toward outside of the tank and a first lower end portion that opens toward inside of the tank and a second flow channel defined by a second upper end portion that opens toward outside of the tank and a second lower end portion that opens toward inside of the tank, wherein the second flow channel has an expansion portion arranged in a middle portion between the second upper end portion and the second lower end portion and configured to form a step to expand a cross-sectional area.
Further features of the present disclosure will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Hereinafter, exemplary embodiments are described with reference to the drawings. However, it is to be understood that each of exemplary embodiments described below is not intended to limit the present disclosure, and that not all of combinations of aspects that are described in the following embodiments are necessarily required with respect to an issue to be solved by the present disclosure. In addition, relative arrangements and shapes of components described in each of the exemplary embodiments are illustrative only, and the descriptions of the exemplary embodiments are not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure.
<Apparatus Configuration>
The recording apparatus 100 separates recording media, one by one, stacked on a sheet feeding cassette 2 disposed at the front side of the casing 1 or a sheet feeding tray 3 disposed at a back side of the casing 1, and feeds the separated recording medium using a feeding unit (not illustrated). The recording medium fed by the feeding unit is conveyed by a conveyance roller 4 as a conveyance unit to a recording position opposite the recording unit 5, so that the recording unit 5 performs recording based on data. The recording medium on which the recording by the recording unit 5 has been completed is discharged by a discharge portion (not illustrated) to a discharge tray (a discharging unit) 101 disposed on the sheet feeding cassette 2.
A direction (a direction Y in
The recording unit 5 of the present exemplary embodiment includes a recording head including an ejection port from which ink is ejected. The recording unit 5 is mounted on a carriage 6 that reciprocally moves in a main scanning direction (a direction X in
The recording head in the present exemplary embodiment includes a unit (e.g., a heating resistance element) that generates thermal energy as energy to be used for ink ejection, and employs a method for causing a state of ink to be changed by the thermal energy (film boiling). Accordingly, high-density and high-definition image recording is achieved. The present exemplary embodiment is not limited to employment of such a method using the thermal energy. A method using vibration energy in a configuration including a piezoelectric transducer can be employed.
The present exemplary embodiment is described using an example in which a recording head of the recording unit 5 is a serial head mounted on the carriage 6. However, the present exemplary embodiment is not limited thereto. The present exemplary embodiment can be applied to a line head including a plurality of ejection ports in an area corresponding to a width of a recording medium.
The ink tank 8 is disposed to the recording apparatus 100 for each color of ink ejectable by a recording head of the recording unit 5. In the present exemplary embodiment, a black-ink tank 8K, a cyan-ink tank 8C, a magenta-ink tank 8M, and a yellow-ink tank 8Y are disposed. The ink tanks 8K, 8C, 8M, and 8Y respectively store black ink, cyan ink, magenta ink, and yellow ink. These four ink tanks are collectively called the ink tank 8 or ink tanks 8. Each of the cyan ink, the magenta ink, and the yellow ink is merely one example of color ink, and the color ink is not limited to thereto.
As illustrated in
<Configuration of Ink Tank>
Each of
On an upper surface of the ink tank 8, a filling port 14 as an opening portion for ink injecting is disposed. The filling port 14 can be sealed with a tank cap 15. The tank cap 15 includes a member having rubber elasticity. A user removes the tank cap 15 from the filling port 14, and inserts an ink replenishing container 17 (see
<Configuration of Needle>
In the ink tank 8, a needle 18 as an injection auxiliary member that assists injecting of ink from the filling port 14 is provided inside the filling port 14.
The needle 18 includes a first flow channel 21a and a second flow channel 21b to cause the inside and the outside of the ink tank 8 to communicate with each other. The first flow channel 21a is defined by a first upper end portion 19a and a first lower end portion 20a. The first upper end portion 19a is exposed upward relative to the top of the filling port 14, and opens toward the outside of the ink tank 8. The first lower end portion 20a opens toward the inside of the ink tank 8 (the ink containing chamber 9). Moreover, the second flow channel 21b is defined by a second upper end portion 19b and a second lower end portion 20b. The second upper end portion 19b is exposed from the filling port 14, and opens toward the outside of the ink tank 8. The second lower end portion 20b opens toward the inside of the ink tank 8 (the ink containing chamber 9).
Each of the first upper end portion 19a and the second upper end portion 19b is obliquely open with respect to a direction in which the flow channel extends. Each of the first upper end portion 19a and the second upper end portion 19b has an inclined plane with a height that increases toward a center portion where the first upper end portion 19a and the second upper end portion 19b are in contact with each other. Moreover, an opening area of the first upper end portion 19a is larger than an opening area of the second upper end portion 19b. The first flow channel 21a is configured such that the opening area of the first upper end portion 19a, a cross-sectional area in a middle portion of the first flow channel 21a, and an opening area of the first lower end portion 20a are substantially equal. In the second flow channel 21b, on the other hand, an expansion portion 22 is arranged in a middle portion of the flow channel and configured such that a cross-sectional area between the expansion portion 22 and the second lower end portion 20b is larger than an opening area of the second upper end portion 19b. That is, the second flow channel 21b includes the expansion portion 22 that forms a step that abruptly increases a cross-sectional area in a middle portion of the flow channel.
In the ink injecting operation, one of the first flow channel 21a and the second flow channel 21b, which form the needle 18, functions as a flow channel through which ink flows, and the other functions as a flow channel through which air flows. The ink replenishing container 17 has an opening that is closed by a sealing member (not illustrated) such that ink does not drip until the ink replenishing container 17 is inserted into the filling port 14 even if the opening is faced downward.
As illustrated in
At this time, as illustrated in
The ink injecting operation according to the present exemplary embodiment is performed using gas-liquid exchange between air and ink. In a case where ink flows into the ink tank 8 from the ink replenishing container 17, an amount of air as much as an amount of ink, which has flowed into the ink tank 8, flows out to the ink replenishing container 17 from the ink tank 8. As described above, since the first flow channel 21a becomes to function as an ink inflow channel to the ink tank 8, the air inside the ink tank 8 flows out to the ink replenishing container 17 via the second flow channel 21b. Thus, the first flow channel 21a is determined as an ink flow channel, whereas the second flow channel 21b is determined as an air flow channel.
In a case in which the second flow channel 21b has a cross-sectional area that is constant as similar to the first flow channel 21a, a difference in ink flow speed (flowability) between the first flow channel 21a and the second flow channel 21b is not generated. This causes equal amounts of ink to flow to both the first flow channel 21a and the second flow channel 21b. Consequently, determination of an ink flow channel and an air flow channel requires time. Moreover, in a case where pressure balance occurs due to mixture of ink and air in both of the first flow channel 21a and the second flow channel 21b, an inflow of ink stops partway and the ink injecting operation may be interrupted.
According to the present exemplary embodiment, on the other hand, an expansion portion, which forms a step in a cross-sectional area of one flow channel, is arranged in one of two flow channels, so that ink flows into the other flow channel more easily. Thus, determination of flow channels is made promptly, and time necessary for the ink injecting operation is shortened.
Moreover, in the present exemplary embodiment, since the opening area of the first upper end portion 19a is greater than the opening area of the second upper end portion 19b, an amount of ink to flow through the first flow channel 21a tends to be greater when the ink replenishing container 17 is attached. Thus, determination of the flow channels in the needle 18 can be more facilitated.
Furthermore, in the ink injecting operation using the gas-liquid exchange, ink should flow into the ink tank 8 from the ink replenishing container 17 as an amount of air having flowed out to the ink replenishing container 17 from the ink tank 8 is large. Accordingly, an outflow of air into the ink replenishing container 17 should be facilitated and an inflow of ink into the ink tank 8 should also be smoothly performed as air is easily separated from the needle 18 by becoming a bubble.
In the present exemplary embodiment, the first upper end portion 19a and the second upper end portion 19b each have an inclined plane. With such planes, air is separated from the needle 18 more easily, and an outflow of air into the ink replenishing container 17 is facilitated. Details are described with reference to
Each of
In a case where an inclined plane is not formed as described in the comparative example illustrated in
On the other hand, in a case where an inclined plane is formed as described in the present exemplary embodiment illustrated in
Even if heights of the first upper end portion 19a and the second upper end portion 19b do not differ as described in the first exemplary embodiment, an upward movement of a bubble is facilitated since the second upper end portion 19b is obliquely open with respect to the bubble to move upward. Therefore, a contact area of the second upper end portion 19b can be reduced more relative to the comparative examples illustrated in
As described above, in the needle 18 as an injection auxiliary member including a plurality of flow channels, one flow channel has an expansion portion that forms a step to expand a cross-sectional area, and the other flow channel does not have a step. Accordingly, an ink flow speed in the one flow channel having the expansion portion becomes lower, whereas an ink flow speed in the other flow channel becomes relatively higher. Thus, an inflow of ink to the ink tank 8 via the other flow channel having no step is facilitated. In the ink injecting operation by gas-liquid exchange, an inflow of air to the one flow channel having a step is facilitated since an amount of air as much as an amount of ink having flowed into the ink tank 8 needs to flow out to the ink replenishing container 17. Accordingly, a flow channel through which ink is to flow and a flow channel through which air is to flow are determined quicker than a case in which the one flow channel does not have an expansion portion (a step), and thus an ink injecting time can be shortened.
The present exemplary embodiment has been described using a configuration in which the ink tank 8 is fixed to the recording apparatus 100 and ink is supplied to a recording head by the supply tube 7. However, the present exemplary embodiment is not limited to such a configuration. The present exemplary embodiment can be applied to a configuration in which both an ink tank and a recording head are mounted on the carriage 6. That is, a filling port and a needle can be arranged in an ink tank to be mounted on a carriage 6. In such a configuration, a user injects ink from an ink replenishing container.
Hereinafter, a second exemplary embodiment is described with reference to the drawings. Since a basic configuration of the present exemplary embodiment is similar to that of the first exemplary embodiment, only a distinctive configuration is described below.
When ink injecting progresses and the liquid surface 23 in the ink tank 8 (the ink containing chamber 9) reaches the first lower end portion 20a, the first lower end portion 20a is blocked by ink. Consequently, air in the ink tank 8 becomes unable to flow out to the ink replenishing container 17 via the first lower end portion 20a (the first flow channel 21a). Thus, the first flow channel 21a is determined to function as an ink flow channel, and the second flow channel 21b is determined to function as an air flow channel.
Accordingly, a reduction in distance between the first lower end portion 20a of the first flow channel 21a functioning as an ink flow channel and the bottom surface of the ink tank 8 (the ink containing chamber 9) enables flow channel determination to be further facilitated, and time necessary for the ink injecting operation can be shortened.
Hereinafter, a third exemplary embodiment is described with reference to the drawings. Since a basic configuration of the present exemplary embodiment is similar to that of the first exemplary embodiment, only a distinctive configuration is described below.
Hereinafter, a fourth exemplary embodiment is described with reference to the drawings. Since a basic configuration of the present exemplary embodiment is similar to that of the first exemplary embodiment, only a distinctive configuration is described below.
Since the first upper end portion 19a protrudes upward relative to the second upper end portion 19b, the first upper end portion 19a contacts ink stored in the ink replenishing container 17 before the second upper end portion 19b contacts the ink when the needle 18 is inserted into the ink replenishing container 17 for the ink injecting operation. Such a configuration enables ink to flow though the first flow channel 21a more easily, and flow channel determination is further facilitated.
While the present disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the disclosure is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2020-130508 | Jul 2020 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/388,612, filed on Jul. 29, 2021. This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2020-130508, filed Jul. 31, 2020, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
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20230127454 A1 | Apr 2023 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 17388612 | Jul 2021 | US |
Child | 18069142 | US |